释义 |
Definition of ponzu in English: ponzunoun ˈpɒnzuːˈpänˌzo͞o mass noun(in Japanese cooking) a sauce or dip made with soy sauce and citrus juice. Example sentencesExamples - Reducing the ponzu and sesame makes the sardines taste less like herring from Russ & Daughters.
- Factors such as the thickness of the slices affect other features such as the composition of the dipping sauce; a citrus fruit and soy sauce called ponzu is a favourite with very thin slices.
- The tataki of tuna with fennel and gingered ponzu was fine, as were the spiced tuna tartare and tuna sashimi rolls.
- But day-boat cod in soy ginger, filet mignon in a piquant soy, and velvety skate in ponzu and brown butter are elegantly simple, while roasted chili-spiked lobster is magnificently sloppy.
- The signature starter, Nine Bites, is an assortment of mini-masterpieces that might include a tuna sashimi roll with truffled ponzu (a soy-citrus sauce) or a lobster pot de creme as silky as creme caramel.
Origin Japanese, from pon 'smack, pop' + zu, from su 'vinegar'. Definition of ponzu in US English: ponzunounˈpänˌzo͞o A Japanese dipping sauce made from soy sauce, lime juice, vinegar, and fish flakes. Example sentencesExamples - Reducing the ponzu and sesame makes the sardines taste less like herring from Russ & Daughters.
- The signature starter, Nine Bites, is an assortment of mini-masterpieces that might include a tuna sashimi roll with truffled ponzu (a soy-citrus sauce) or a lobster pot de creme as silky as creme caramel.
- Factors such as the thickness of the slices affect other features such as the composition of the dipping sauce; a citrus fruit and soy sauce called ponzu is a favourite with very thin slices.
- But day-boat cod in soy ginger, filet mignon in a piquant soy, and velvety skate in ponzu and brown butter are elegantly simple, while roasted chili-spiked lobster is magnificently sloppy.
- The tataki of tuna with fennel and gingered ponzu was fine, as were the spiced tuna tartare and tuna sashimi rolls.
Origin Japanese, from pon ‘smack, pop’ + zu, from su ‘vinegar’. |